Havemercy is the creation of Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett, two college students and LJ users who decided there were entirely not enough of the three above things in their lives, and set out to write a charming, exciting, funny steampunk fantasy. They've garnered a loyal fanbase pretty quickly, which likely has something to do with the fact that Ms. Jones is the coauthor of The Shoebox Project, which... possibly has an even loyaler fanbase.

Anyways, Havemercy tells the story of four men in the alternate-Russia-based country of Volstov: Royston, the magician; Hal, the quiet country boy; Thom, the scholar; and Rook, the airman. And, oh yes, the airmen ride dragons. But not just any dragons. No, these dragons... they're made of metal. And they're Volstov's greatest weapon in the war against their neighbors, the Ke'Han.

... A war that takes a bit of a backseat for most of the novel, because other elements are far more interesting. Royston is banished to his brother's home in the countryside for being... different. It's there that he meets Hal, and something starts to stir. Meanwhile, after a bit of an incident involving the wife of a diplomat, Thom is asked to teach etiquette to the Dragon Corps, including the boorish, foulmouthed, snarky Rook.

The sequel, titled Shadow Magic, was released in the summer of 2009. It follows the story of diplomatic peace talks with the Ke-Han, involving a new cast of main characters. Caius and Alcibiades, who both featured minor roles in the first book, are both sent as part of a group of diplomats to the Ke-Han capitol. Caius is a slightly crazy, very effeminate young man who will mess you up. Alcibiades is a gruff soldier who is not at all happy with the job he's been given. Joining them are Mamoru, a prince of the Ke-Han who is probably the nicest person you will meet in this book, and Kouje, his loyal, duty-bound retainer. The general consensus is that the second book is just as good, if not better, than the first, with what might possibly be even moreHo Yay stuffed in.

The third book, Dragon Soul, released in the summer of 2010, runs approximately concurrently with Shadow Magic. It follows Rook and Thom, returning from Havemercy, this time on a journey to the Hanging Gardens of Eklesias, despite the fact that Rook doesn't even know where the fuck they are. Said journey gets derailed almost immediately once Rook finds out people are digging up and selling bits and pieces of the dragons destroyed at the end of Havemercy, possibly including Havemercy herself. He is not pleased. Madoka, a Ke-Han scavenger, is also roped into the plot, very much against her will, and Malahide is sent out as a spy for the Esar to find out who's selling the dragon parts.

The fourth and, at least for now, final book in the series, Steel Hands, was released in August of 2011. It features Balfour and Adamo, two of the airmen from the first book, as narrators, as well as two new characters, Laure and Toverre. It deals with a continuation of the plot of Dragon Soul, and the effects the events of that book have on Thremedon.

This novel provides examples of:

Agent Peacock: Royston spends forever picking out his clothes in the morning, is embarrassed to be seen with a red nose, and loves theater, not to mention the open gayness. He can also blow stuff up by thinking about it. Caius is another example: he wears feminized versions of male clothing, primps and preens, and likes fluttering about with a fan... which happens to hold retractable knives in the creases. That's the least dangerous he gets.

All Girls Want Bad Boys: Rook. Selfish, nasty, narrow-minded, misogynistic, violent, vulgar, at times outright sociopathic. The ladies are not deterred in the least.

All Men Are Perverts: Well, within the walls of the Airman, this is certainly true. Except for poor Balfour...

Ambadassador The whole Volstovic delegation to Ke-Han in Shadow Magic, as shown by what happens when their hosts turn on them.

Back from the Dead: In a way. One presumed-dead character returns near the end of Steelhands, although he was never really dead in the first place.

Badass Gay: Royston, for his ability to blow things up with his mind, and Hal, who, despite being a twenty-year-old from the sticks, figures out the cause of the magicians' plague for them.

Badass Normal: Madoka. Despite being untrained in either magic or combat, she still holds her own, mostly through sheer force of will. She even manages to take down Dragon Soul 's main antagonist, a dangerous sorcerer.

The Beard: Laure for Toverre, although predictably, in the end, they decide to call the engagement off.

Camp Gay: Toverre. He constantly insists on dressing Laure, although part of this may also stem from his rather OCD tendencies.

Royston, too, although he combines this with a healthy dose of badassery. He spends forever picking out his wardrobe in the morning, is so vain that he dreads being seen in public with a cold, and buys theater season tickets.

Cast Full of Pretty Boys: The cast is really entirely male (except for one character), and if you take fanart at its word, almost all of them are gorgeous. The third and fourth books remedy this slightly by adding more female characters as narrators and major players.

The Dandy: Caius Greylace. His obsession with being pretty annoys Alcibiades, but no one else seems too bothered by it (or they don't care). Also, in Steelhands, Toverre. The back of the book says that he is 'more interested in his wife-to-be's clothes than her bed', which is completely accurate.

The Determinator: Rook, particularly toward the end of Dragon Soul. Madoka also has her moments.

Disguised in Drag: While on the run, Mamoru (very convincingly) disguises himself as a woman in order to avoid suspicion.

Fantasy Counterpart Culture: The Ke-Han = feudal Japan/Manchu Dynasty China. Volstov also bears a striking similarities to Russia (say th'Esar and th'Esarina too quickly and it sounds like Tsar and Tsarina), and the Arlemagne naming scheme, at least, sounds quite French. The desert nomads in "Dragon Soul" are definitely Bedouins

Find the Cure: The point of Hal, Royston, and the magicians' discussions in the Basquiat, though it's less "exciting quest" and more "long, anxious discussions."

Foe Yay :later Bro Yay Invoked. Rook and Thom. Just. Rook and Thom. The authors, when asked, even stated that this was pretty much intentional.

Specifically, they were going to be paired off, but it didn't survive the editing process. The reason given is that the dynamics between them were a lot more interesting without a romance, but another likely explanation is not quite being able to get a gay incest couple past the radar.

Four-Temperament Ensemble: Though they don't travel together, the four protagonists can definitely be seen as an example of this; Royston is phlegmatic, Rook is choleric, Thom is melancholic, and Hal is sanguine.

Guy-on-Guy Is Hot: Although not terribly explicit, the book contains numerous cases of open gay lust and endlessHomoerotic Subtext. Aside from the actual canon, Rook and Thom—their animosity borders on Slap-Slap-Kiss territory—are the biggest offenders, followed, in descending order, by Thom and Hal, Thom and Balfour, Royston and Adamo...oh, hell, everyone.

Which does not even begin to cover Steelhands, which is possibly even gayer than Havemercy was. There's Toverre and pretty much every attractive male he meets, including, hilariously, Hal, and the airmen are once again in the spotlight, meaning that the homoerotic dynamics are back in full force. This doesn't even include Royston and Hal being quietly adorable in the background.

Malahilde seems almost like she's flirting with Madoka at points in Dragon Soul.

Heterosexual Life-Partners: Only one half of the Royston-Alcibiades friendship is actually heterosexual, but they are lifelong platonic friends and confidants who trust one another with everything, except cooking decent food.

Hide Your Gays: Not the books themselves (obviously) but the front flap description for Havemercy makes no mention whatsoever of Hal or Royston.

Irony: At the very beginning of Havermercy, Royston remarks that many people find it odd and/or distasteful that th'Esar chose a commoner to be Provost. Two books later in Dragon Soul, it's revealed that the Provost is th'Esar's illegitimate child.

Odd Friendship: The cultured, sarcastic Royston and the gruff, foulmouthed Adamo fit this, though it's somewhat subverted in that they've apparently been close since before the novel started - Word of God has confirmed that they've been close since they were students. This is elaborated on a bit more in Steelhands, where we get to seem them interact a bit more.

Caius and Alcibiades in Shadow Magic. Alcibiades pretty much hates Caius's guts, and yet they still spend the majority of the book together.

Parental Abandonment: Rook and Thom's parents left them to fend for themselves at a very young age. Also, Dmitri's father, that is, th'Esar dumped him at an orphanage because Dmitri is an illegitimate child he had with Antoinette.

Sociopathic Hero: Rook. Caius isn't as brutish, but still has a dubious conscience, based on his willingness to torture anyone who gives him even half an excuse.

Sensitivity Training: For the Dragon Corp after Rook thought the Arlemagne diplomat's wife was a whore.

Shrinking Violet: A rare male example in mousy, bookish, freckle-faced Hal. True to type, he comes into his own at the end, leaving Nevers with Royston when his exile is cut short and eventually saving the country from magical plague.

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